TELEPHONE 8506 want Ads. Bu er meets seller with G. 3- y Dial 8506 ask for‘ fled ad taker, for quick results. Autlinrizeo .. second Class Mail Departn ent. —-——"’ yaw." Cabinet Ministers night were forced to. cancel _ which started late yester- ' afternoon blocked the high- . 3: - . . ~ Minister Donald Flem- lllz turned back to Charlotte- town after he had travelled about men’ miles in the direction of llriswhere he was to have ad- , a Progressive Conserva- lllerrally, , ‘ llEEll‘lN({‘: GOES ON u1Ah°l*l-100 loyal supporters of :9 Dally however showed up I. ere addresses were heard from (MA. Macdonald, candidate for F and Melvin J. McQuaid,’ Peilllent of the Progressive Con- mf ve Dartymin Prince Edward «N (l» John R. MacLean, presid- ErVeteran’s Affairs Minister A. J. helix, who /was scheduled to I itak. at Vernon, was also obliged Mzlhhndon his trip after he had , led word from Mr. Heath .."‘.1l}*’t1TIe. that drifts and poor , it’ would make the trip in- mviable. Mr. Macquarrie had «a ‘W515’ reached Vernon where -m3(’T°UD of his supporters had an “final chat with -their candid- ,g,al$ri1Fl9mmE expressed regret » 9 was unable to fulfill his 1, Speaking engagement on the He leaves for Moncton this .’ €- limis ENTHUSIASM about his impressions of ‘ ¥’Tl°5€}lt election campaign, 9”" ‘fig -stated that out of ='2‘§.3ml’a18ns in which he has a, ‘Vim’-d,.he h_as~never seen ‘on. ilhusiasrn displayed. “You . it up”, he said, I:::;]i:?N (‘C1’) -— British naval ,,,,s»éa 5 lhln-k any future battle er t;“P1"°macy may be fought M 9 Sea instead’ of on or ‘ Ht. -V;i;d%ls‘a111l5' ‘spokesmen empha- ' Ewirend in naval think- ihv 1“ 8111 is pushing the ‘ nbgglgnenl Of nuclear - powered "93 as a matter of ur- . thfillailc financial secre- s ha, fiflliiiralty and a war- rmcer. said in the “esday night that the Rucléarpsubmarines is 33515 bound to trans- Wal‘fare_ ‘ 9 ' MENT STAGE ‘IS was also given 9 navy is consider- tfllfi American inter- missile. HEATH ‘MACQUARRIE, HON. A. inns STOP‘ ME;ETING5S “it is there”. Mr. Brooks, who has been cam- paigning extensively in Nova Scotia, also expressed his appre- ciation of the public interest being shown in the campaign. He pre- dicted that the P. C.’s would gain a couple of seats in New Bruns- wick, two in Newfoundland. and keep the same in Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island. VETERAN CAMPAIGNER. Mr. Brooks first entered poli- tics in the New Brunswick pro- vincial field in 19 5.“ His first try in Federal politi 5 proved suc- cessful when he gained a seat in the Bennett administration of 1935. He has been re-elected in Ottawa _.._*______ by the Post Office J. ‘moons, GEORGE J. ROGERS z lcébinetMinistersCaugl1’r lnitldtime Island Storm each "succeeding election cam- paign and last year was named to the Cabinet by Mr. Diefenbak- er. His home is in Sussex, N. B Mr. Brooks was met at the Charlottetown Airport at 4.30 by Heath Macquarrie and George Rogers, President of the Queleiliis r. County P. C. ‘Association.’ Bennett Carr, secretary of the P C. Provincial Association accom- on his welcome of Mr. Flemming at 7.00 panied Mr. Macquarrie pm the Island to address a meeting a Montague tonight. . American Sub Claims Record PORTLAND, England (AP)- The new American “nuclear sub- marine Skate surfaced’ in Port- land haiiborwednesday with a record for underwater eastward crossing of the Atlantkz.’ The sleek, lead-colored craft did it in eight days, 11 hours in a shakedown cruise in which, the skipper said, absolutely nothing went wrong. The Ska.te surfaced for the first time near Lizard Head Tues- day‘ night. This was‘ considered the end of the trip. U.-S. Navy announcement said the Skate’s run from her home port in New 190131-15, as the main armament for its own nuclear-powered sub- marine, dreadn-ought. Both Po- laris and the Dreadnought are In the development stage and at? not expected to be available until after 1960. _ _' I Allan said Britain cannot be without “iba-llistiic sea power’ and hope to remain a major naiiun with any effective say in World affairs. _ This represents something of _a turnabout in British strateg‘c thinking. Two months 'a_1g0 the de‘ fence chiefs were giving a cool reception to suggestions that Brit- ain should develop rocket-carry- ing submarines. The recent visit‘ to London of Admiral Hyman l’tich:over_, the United States Navys P-50m‘-"C EX‘ pert, may have caused ‘them to change their minds. He is under- stood to have given the sdmir-alty London, did not give the Skate’s ex-ac mileage.‘ ‘ WEST-EAST RECORD The announcement emphasized thatthis was just a record from west to east. The first U.S. nu- clear submarine, the‘ Nautilus,- made a return trip from England in 195 hours, compared to the Skate’s 203 hours in the east- bound passage. The U.S. Navy said these fig- ures were not to be construed as -the relative representative of speed of the two submarines. §Bri’rain Pushes Builcling Nuclear Submarine Fleet detailed results of the perform- ance of American, atomic sub- marines together with consider- able in-forma-tion on Polaris. GREAT DIVING DEPTH In the Commons, Allan spoke of the nuclear sub>marine’~s “almost unlimited endurance, its speed‘, manoeuvr e a b i 1 i t y and great diving depth.” Armed with a mis sile like Polaris, which has a 1, 500-mile range, its tactical su periority was incalculable. “It is sa‘d that nuclear, sub marines thus armed and.carry- ing 20 or moremissiles will be able to place themselves within rangeof almost any target in the world. “There will be little fear of de- tection or counter-attack. All this has made the development of our own Dreadnought even more ur- gent." This morning at 10 o’clock Mr. Fleming will hold a press con- ferencé at the Charlottetown Hotel. Mr. Brooks will remain on Conn., was completely submerged. The announcement “Covers Prince Edward ‘Island Like The Dew" North Korea Releases 26 Aboard A Plane TOKYO (Reuters) -- North Korea Wednesday released two American pilots and 24 passen- gers held» since their plane was forced to land in North Korea Feb. 16. The spokesman said the pas- sengers and their personal be- longings wouldlbe turned over to representatives of the U.S. gov- ernment, West German govern- ment and South Korean Red Cross. He gave no immediate inform- ation on the remaining eight pas- sengers aboard the plane the South Korean government claims was detained in flight by seven Communist agents. Plan Tho-rough Study Of Metal Lobster Traps OTTAWA (C-P)—Fisheries sci- entists, w o r k i n g with diving ‘chambers and underwater televi- sion and motion picture cameras, this spring will launch a thorough study of the use of metal lobster traps, the federal fisheries de- partment announced Wednesday. The announcement said the ob- jective of-the research is to de- termine whether metal traps are more economical than the tradi- tional wooden ones in catching lobster. Working from the Greenwood, a naval harbor tug based at Hal- ifax, the scientists will record the ' actions of lobsters in the traps. The department said the metal traps have been tested on the va- rious fishing grounds during the last four years. The , scientists’ earlier observations indicated the metal traps can withstand gale conditions better than traps made of wood. ‘ Lobster fishermen have suf- fered heavy trap losses during storms. . Family Sails , To Join Fatl1e_§r,-_ But Full Fcitcil . . OAKVIILLE, Ont. (CP) ‘—- An Italian mother with her two chil- dren on the linei',Con-stit-ution en route to New York won’t know until the ship docks Monday that -119.1?-sv,;l111Sl1‘:i5114.3.:;»is dead*.= I‘ V V Mrs. Carmellla "Pasut. sold all her belongings before setting out from Naples with her children, Allesandro, 7, and Lilliano, 9, to join her\husba.nd here. The husbaind, Luigi Pasut, 35, fell 100 feet from a railway trestle to his death Tuesdaynear this town midway between To- ronto and Hamilton. Local Red Crossauthorities are trying to raise funds‘ to have Mr. Pasut’s brother,‘ E.O.. Pasut, who has a home here, go _to New York to break the news. A weekly newspaper, the Oak- ville - Trafalgar Journal, has joined radio station CHWO in set- ting up a fund to aid the family when they arrive. n LEAVES NEWSPAPER WORK WIENNIPEG (OP) — John M. Gordon, Winnipeg newspaper man has been appointed executive di- rector of the University of Man- itoba Alumni Association and Public relations assistant to uni- versity President Hugh H. Saund- erson, it was announced Wednes- day. Mr. Gordon joined the Win- nipeg Tribune as a reporter in 1933 and was managing editor be- fore moving to the Winnipeg Free t Press as an editorial wni-ter ip 1952. CHARLOTTETOWN CANADA. THURSDAY, MARCH 6, l958 MONTREAL (CP) -— .At least eight men and possibly 12 were missing and believed killed Wed- nesday night when a coffer d-am at a bridge construction site on the Rivieres des Prairies, which skirts the north end of Montreal Island, gave way apparently un- der pressure of ice. Authorities at the scene said it would be some time yet befc‘-e the exact number of men missing is determined. About 450 men were working on the bridge and the number missing‘ will not be known until a roll call is com- pleted. Three of the men working in- side the water-tight dram-—a cor- rugated steel structure 25 feet across and measuring about 100 A storm that developed yes- terday afternoon blocked most roads in the province overnight. Government plows were operat- ing well into the night in some areas to keep traffic‘ moving but in other places plows were called in early in the night when drirfitinng snow made their opera- tions allbuit useless. . Winds that gusted to 40 miles per hour were whipping the snow into drifts bbat slowed traffic to a crawl and made visibility so poor that driving was in hazardous operation at best. ‘ In some areas traffic wa halted early in the. night. Two came here yesterday to address political meetings had to content themselves. with a cosy room in the Charlottetown Hotel instead. Hon. Donald Fleming, Minister of Finance, was headed for Souris. Hon. Alfred Brooks, Minister of Veterans Affairs, had hopes of speaking at Vernon River. wonsr IN EASTERN AREA The Eastern part of the pro- vince bore the brunt of the storm. A report from Montague at niidiiight said that all roads were blockedand all plows call- ed in until 6 am. today. Storm casualties included curlers from Charlottetown, Summerside and the R.C.A.F. who were storm- stayed in Montague over night. A Charlottetown car tried to make the trip home l)lllts«,_9l1ly got as far as Bell’s Hill. On the St. Peters highway plows were called in from Morell and snow was blocking‘ the road about twenty minutes after the plows went through. Several plows were working on the Borden highway well into the night to keep the Trans Canada highway open for traffic. Indications were that the West- ern part of the province escaped although reportsindicated that Dressmakers In 9 States NEW YORK (AP) — For the first time in 25 years, dress- m-akers Wednesday launched a general ‘strike against the U.S. garment industry. More than 105,000 walked out in nine east- ern states. With a new generation taking over the work benches since the last strike, many of the dress- makers never had walked a picket line before. The striking International L a die 5 Garment Workers Union used sound trucks to brief them on the almost for- gotten mechanism of a strike. Wages and contract enforce- ment were the chief issues in the walkout, which got under way at 10 a.m. _ _ Most of the industry’s Easter finery already has been delivered to the dress shops. A prolonged ' walkout, however, could throw ' summer and f all production ‘ schedules out of kilter in the $1,- 000,000,000-a-year industry. MAY SHORTEN VACATION As 65,000 dressmakers—mostly women — left the lofts in New York’s cluttered garment district to march on Madison Square Garden for a strike rally, Mayor Robert F. Wagner said he might cut short a Bahamas vacation. Wagner promised protection for picket but warned both Strike sides again st violence that characterized past g. in r in ent strikes. ~ Besides the 65,000 New York strikers, 40,000 others walked out in New York State, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Massachusetts, Ver- mont, Rhode Island, Connecticut, Delaware and Maryland. The union walked out for a 15- per-cent wage increase and a 35- hour week for piecework dress- makers. The employers offered five per cent and overtime after 371/2 hours. Present wages in New York average $2.10 an hour. The ILGWU also wants stiffer penalties for contract violations, including union dress jobbers dealing with non - union con- tractors. ‘ Tries Luminous Number Plates 1 REGINA (CP)~—The first 1,000 car licence plates sold in Saskat- chewan this year will be treated with special luminous paint in an attempt to cut down accident-s. The provincial highway traffic board, reporting Wednesday that hcence plates will go on sale Maiich 17, said an extra $5 be charged for the treated plates. If successful they may be Federa-l- camnet ;.ministers,.;,,who,& Honeymoiofning Witl1 His Immigrant Bride» St. Peters because the drifting » feet parallel with the river—es- caped and are reported in good condition. Two of"them, both unidentified, were allowed to go home while‘ the third, Laurent Theoget, 23, of St. Eustaclie, Que., was taken to hospital in suburban Cartierville with minor injuries. BEAM GAVE WAY. The report said that a supporting iron beam in the temporary dam, built to permit construction of a bridge pier near the centre of the river, apparently gave way weak- ening the dam’s walls and allow- ing water to rush in. “It all happened in about 30 seconds,” he said. ‘‘I still don’t know how I managed to escape.” Snow Plows Lose With Drifts Last Night cars were m"oving with difficulty even ‘in daylight at Albany corner and in an area between Bedeque and Middleton. Trouble was also reported‘in keeping traffic mov- ing at Travellers’ Rest. N0 STORM AT ALBERTON A report from Alberton at mid- night said there was no. sign of a storm there then and weather re- ports earlier in the evening from the Radio Range station here in- the province would be hit the hardest. Secondary roadsthat were lying in the path of the storm filled TORONTO (GP) — Harry Oakes, 25, son of the late mining multi - millionaire Sir ‘Harry Oakes, left here Wednesday for a Bahaimas honeymoon’ with the ‘18-year-old German .imrniigrant girl he ‘met at a house party four months ago. »- - The couple were married Mon- day in a civil ceremony in subur- ban Willowdale. First public news of the wedding came Wed- nesday when they talked to re- porters just before boarding an airliner for Nassau. The bride is the former Chris- tiane Botsch, daughter of a Harn- bui-g meat packer who came to’ Canada 18 months ago to visit family friends and attend a uni- versity. extension course here. Friends of the bride described the Botsch family as “wealthy,” but Christiane would not com‘- ment,‘ except to remark: "I just don’t know what to say to that.” FATHER MURDERED Harry is the youngest of three sons of Sir Harry Oakes who struck it rich in goldfields near Kirkland Lake, Ont. in 1911. Sir Harry was found bludgeoned to death in his Bahamas mansion Suggests Tree Removal Plan For The Valley HALIFAX (CP)—— Eric W. Balcom (L--Kings North) called Tuesday for a fruit tree removal scheme in the Annapolis Valley and increased government grants to education. Mr. Balcom told the legislature probably 300,000 of the valley’s 700,000 trees “could and should be removed.” “We have too many trees in the orchards of the Annapolis Valley which are bearing fruit that cannot be marketed at a profit,” he said. He urged that the Nova Scotia Government de- vise a tree removal program and present it to the federal govern- ment for consideration. “If this tree removal scheme was undertaken now, we would have constructiive employment and something of real benefit to farmers.” Mr. Balcom said government agencies on both the provincial and federal levels are the only ones capable of providing-the nat- ion’s universities with permanent sources of income. “Substantial government grants are the only answer to the finan- cial problems confronting the universities today,” he said. At least $1,000,000 of increased fed- eral monies the province expected to receive should be invested in higher education. through bur- saries and scholarships or by treated foil stiaiadard usn. direct grants. :- dicated that the Eastern part of‘ The mishap occurred durin-g the supper hour, as the men were about to get off work. The trapped men were working 32 feet below the river level. Two of the rescued men were found clinging to the side of the dam whic-h jutted eight feet out of the water. DIVERS AT WORK Three frogmen and two divers are on the scene, submerging into the swirling water in quest of bodies of the victims. ’ Paul Brais, superintendent of the Dufresne Cons-true-tion Com- pany, said the rescue attempt is “very dangerous work," the river is swollen by recent thaws and cakes of jagged ice dot«the bla-ck surface. » Fight quickly last evening when the snow drifted across and into cut- tings left by plows after previous storms. Plow; will be in operation early’ this morning, the plow despatch- er’s office assured. They will be on main highways at 6 o’clock. They hit the road to the airport at 5 o’clock and the same goes for the roads to Riverside Hos- pital and Beach Grove. Doubt was expressed last night however, as to whether the plow would get to Borden in time to let traffic reach the early boat this morning. in 1943. Hisson-in-law Alfred de Marigny, was changed with the murder and acquitted. The crime ha-s never been solved. The Oakes estate was estimated at $25,000,000. ' .The couple will stay in the Ba- hamas at the home of Sir Sydney Oakes, Harry’s older brother who inherited his father's banonetcy. They plan to go to Hamlbung later this month for a Lutheran Church wedding, then return to make their home in Toronto. . Harry Jr. has shunned the pub- licity which has surrounded the Oakes family all his life and little is known about him. The couple said their m-arri-age had the blessing of ‘Harry's mother, Lady Eunice Oakes, who attended the ceremony and the reception. Red Leaders Would,G-o To U.S. For’Talks WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi- dent Eisenhower said Wednesday Russia7s~ leaders have told him they are willing to come to the United States for a summit con- ference on East-We-st tensions. He disclosed this at a press conference. But he said it would be “absolutely futile” and “in my opinion damaging” to con- vene any such meeting unless it was adequately» prepared in ad- vance. He firmly endorsed state See- retary Dulles’ move Tuesday in rejecting. conditions Russia has proposed for a pre-summit par- BY. Railway MONTREAL (CP)—Union nego- tiators representing 130,000 rail- way workers across Canada Wed- nesday called on themajor rail- ways to set up a $11,000,000 sever- ance pay fund ’for employees dis- placed by automatioh. The proposal—-conf‘alned in a brief list of demands served last November on the railways by'the 15 non-operating unions—was am- plified by chief union negotiator Frank H. Hall at Wednesday’s public session of a federal board of conciliation. Mr. Hall indicated the unions would put up a strong fight in support of severance pay — al- though he said they are willing to compromise on the form of the WEATHER Variable cloudiness; northwest Winds 30 diminishing in the afternoon to north- west 20. Low-high at Ch’town 30 and 35- ‘ NOT MORE THAN .S. Army Loses Satellite Minutes After Launching 8 To 12 Men Are Missing ln Coffer Dam Collapse CAPE CANAVERAL, F-la. (AP) The U.:S. Army lost its second Explorer 5 a t e 1 l i t e Wednes- day, minutes after firing it space- wa-rd with the Jupiter-C rocket. Odds are that it didn’t go into or- hit. Scientists guessed that the sat- ellite’s radios may have failed, or it might have crashed back into the earth’s atmosphere. In either case, they ;lon’t know where it is‘a_nd probably won’t be able to decide the fate of Ex- plorer II for several days. In Pasadena, Calif., Dr. Wil- liam Pickering, head of jet pro- pulsion laboratory at the Califor- nia Institute of Technology, joined Maj.-Gen. John B. Med-aris, army missile chief, in this statement: “There is every indication that the satellite fired today did not function normally and there is a great probability that it is not in orbit. No further information will be available until technical data are inteiipreted and reduced. This will probably take several days.” DOUBTFUL REPORT Pickering, w h o s e laboratory staff helped build the army’s Jupiter-C, said there was only FIVE CENTS \ Scientists Guess Radios 0 Failed Or It Crcisliead one report thata radio’ signal had been received from Explorer 111, and that was questionable. It Calif. ment at the air force missile test centre at Cape Canaveral. It was learned that the diffi- culty which held up firing of the satellite 18 minutes this aifterizzon was attributed to a tape recorder weighing half a pound. - -The taperecorder was part of an improved cosmic ray counting system. ANSWERS SIGNAL The 32.47-pound tube-like moon would ‘have been able to condense its experience with cosmic rays on each trip around the world. Then, in answer to a secret radio signal from the earth, it would h-ave sent its condensed message back to U.S. scientists. In checking out the little tape recording device in the satellite before the firing, it was found that it failed to work. It was tried several times and finally repeated its signals cor- rectly. PARBS (Reuters)—N~ATO head- quarters here, Wednesday night issued a statement denying that the NATO periinanent council had rejected on Tuesday the Soviet proposals for an East-West sum- mit°meetin-g. ‘ ' Reuters News Agency had quoted NATO sources as saying . .the;...perma1ien~t I couiicdl “ltejectcd the Soviet proposals for a. foreign ministers’ meeting‘ in April to dis- cuss .a summit conttierence in June. ' The NATO headquarters state- ment said: "Reports that the NATO coun- cil yesterday (Tuesday) rejected the proposals made by the Soviet government for a summit meet- ing are unfounded. No decision was taken by the council and the problems involved in the'prepa- ration for such a meeting are still under discussion.” NATO sources said Wednesday the permanent council —- com- posed of permanent ambassadors Wants Name On Labrcidor Lake LONDON (CP) — Brit-ish ex- plorer Sir Randle Fynes Wilson Holme asked in his will that a Labrador ‘lake be named after him, it was revealed Wednesday when the will was made public. But the Royal Geographical -Society indicated it won’t -give enthusiastic support to the wish. Holme, who died last Decem- ber at 93, asked that Lake Wino- kapau be renamed Lake Randle “as Ivwas the first person to get there.” He led an expedition to La-brador’s interior in 1887. The executor of his wil was told to ask the RGS to seek the change. Laurence Kirwin, RGS director and secretary, said any changes ‘‘would be entirely a matter for the Canadian government.” “We ourselves would be very doubtful whether he was, in fact, the first man to reach this lake,” he added. “The evidence sug- gests—and Sir Randle himself said so in a paper in 1888-that men of the Hudson’s Bay Com- pany got there 20 years before. Low of Ottawa, \ NATO Denies Talks Reiected. —could not have taken such a de- cision wit-hont reporting back first to their respective govern- ments. These sources said the general feeling of the session was that the Moscow proposals are unac- ceptable as they stand. They said Russia’s views on how to son- aiiié-iie' a sum-mit * coirference "did not guara-nrtee careful and thor- ough preparation. But the NATO sonioel repeated that’the West must continue to exa ine Soviet proposals pa- tiently and make counter-propo- sals until there is an agreed agenda ensuring some success at the summit. Wood Alcohol Kills 26; MY. Pair Blamed HOBOKEN. N.J. (AP) - A tragic series. of wood ahcohol deaths in New York City —- be- lieved to total 26,- Wednesday was blamed on two Hoboken men said to have peddled the poison- ous pot-ion after one stole it at a c "chemical plant where he works. The two men were arrested here and identified as Pedro Rod- riguez, 26, and Francisco Padin, 32. They were held to await ex- tradition. to New York on fugi- tive warrants. Hoboken police said Padin * stole 60 gallons of the fluid from the Meta chemical plant at Carl- stadt, N.J., where he is em- ployed. Rodriguez diluted the alcohol into a drink commonly known as “King Kong” and then it was sold in New York, of-ficers said. In New York three alleged dis- tributors have been-charged with homicide. ~ ‘ CHOOSE LOW’S SON KINGSTON, Ont. yaear medical student Morton D. son of Social Credit Leader Solon Low, has been elected president’ of the Alma Mater Society, student gov- erning body of Queen’s'univer- sity. Unions Want FundsTo Mee’rAul'omation fund itself. The railways have rejected the union demands, inc1uding'an hourly wage boost of 35 cents. Conciliation services were or- dered when negotiations broke down after brief talks. The con- tract between the railways and the unions was to expire last Dec. 31. PROPOSES KITTY SETUP Mr. Hall suggested the railways set up the $11,000,000 kitty by put- ting aside four cents an hour for each employee until the total is reaclied. . He said the plan is designed to meet “the impact of unemploy- of unemployment that comes from such forces as dieselization and automation.” The proposal for severance pay was a major issue explained by ‘ Mr. Hall during the concila-tion board’s hearing Wednesday. In dealing with other demands from the unions —— increased health and welfare benefits, an extra statutory h 0 1 id 21 y and longer vacations, he indicated the unions are willing to make con- cessions. , The gailiway ‘negotiators will have a chance to question Mr. Hall at today’s session. Later, the company Viewpoint will be put across by railway witnesses who ment [on railway employees and are to appear before the concili- especially, the uneven distribution ation hoard. , - came from a station at Iuyokern, There was no immediate com- (C‘P)-Fifth- . ‘